“I just received a call from Secretary Clinton,” Trump began. “She congratulated us – it’s about us – on our victory and I congratulated her and her family on a very, very hard-fought campaign.”

“Hillary has worked very long and very hard over a long period of time and we owe her a major debt of gratitude for her service to our country,” the president-elect continued. “Now it’s time for America to bind the wounds of division…

“It is time for us to come together as one united people. It’s time. I pledge to every citizen of our land, that I will be president for all Americans and this is so important to me.”

Trump then reached out to those who did not support him in the election and asked for guidance and help from those who voted against him.

“Ours was not a campaign, but rather an incredible and great movement made up of millions of hardworking men and women who want a better future … It’s a movement comprised of Americans from all races, religions and beliefs … Working together, we will begin the urgent task of rebuilding our nation and renewing the American dream.”

2:29 a.m.: Donald Trump, who has just taken Wisconsin’s 10 electoral votes, is expected to speak to his supporters in New York.

Trump needs 13 electoral votes to take the presidency.

2:02 a.m.: Campaign chair John Podesta spoke to the crowd at the Javits Center in New York City.

“They are still counting votes and all votes should count,” Podesta said. “We are not going to have anything else to say tonight.”

Podesta told the crowd to go home and get sleep as he whipped them into cheering by saying Clinton is proud of her supporters and they should be proud of her.

1:59 a.m.: The dollar is tanking

"I would not say the market is in a panic. The possibility of a Trump win, however seemingly remote at the time, was of course something that was considered beforehand and the market is reacting in line with such a scenario," said Bart Wakabayashi, Head of Hong Kong FX Sales at State Street Global Markets, Reuters reported.

1:56 a.m.: Donald Trump has 267 electoral votes of the 270 needed votes to win. Hillary Clinton is at 215.

1:42 a.m.: Trump takes a strong lead.

Multiple news reports are calling victory for Trump in Pennsylvania. He will gain 20 electoral college votes.

CNN projected Trump the winner of Alaska and its three electoral college votes.

1:26 a.m.:Outstanding states – (electoral votes at stake)

Maine – Clinton leads with 84 percent of the votes in. (4)

Michigan – Trump has the lead with 81 percent of precincts reporting. (16)

New Hampshire – Clinton expanded her lead with 87 percent of the votes in. (4)

Pennsylvania – Trump is leading with 97 percent of the precincts reporting. (20)

If Clinton and Trump each win the states as designated above, Clinton will gain 18 electoral votes and Trump will gain 60, putting him ahead of the 270 required electoral votes needed to win the office.

1:19 a.m.: Republicans maintain their hold on the Senate as Toomey wins his seat in Pennsylvania.

BREAKING: Republicans retain control of the Senate with victory in Pennsylvania.— The Associated Press (@AP) November 9, 2016

1:10 a.m.: Donald Trump is the projected winner of Utah as previously called.

Forty-one percent of the votes from that state are in.

Electoral vote count: 244 Trump/215 Clinton

Six states that Obama carried in 2012 have flipped during this election, including Ohio and Florida.

Both Trump and Clinton prepared a victory speech and a concession speech. The tone of Trump’s speech will be “grateful” and “gracious,” CNN reported.

12:08 a.m.: Trump is the projected winner of Iowa. He gets six electoral votes.

Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, New Hampshire and Michigan are still too close to call. Trump currently has the lead in the aforementioned states. Minnesota's results are still not all in, so the electoral votes there are up for grabs.

11:57 p.m.: The vibe at the Javits Center in New York is "low energy"

Some attendees at the Clinton event are crying, some left and many are sitting mouth agape, according to CNN.

Trump took Ohio and its 18 electoral votes, bumping his electoral vote total to 167 against Clinton's 109.

New Mexico, Ohio and Missouri have also been called for Trump. No Republican has ever won the presidency without winning Ohio since Ronald Reagan.

10:27 p.m.: For those who aren't heading to Canada after the election, Colorado could be another option. Weed is legal in the state and now assisted suicide is as well.

10:15 p.m.: Metro reporter Kristin Toussaint said 34 percent of results show that 53 percent of voters are in favor of Question 4 and 47 percent are opposed to making weed legal.

10:14 p.m.: Clinton is projected to take New Mexico's five electoral votes, while Trump is expected to win Mississippi's 10, according to CNN.

10 p.m.: Tensions rise as the race stays tight and markets plunge

Trump is projected to take Montana and its three electoral votes.

Iowa, Nevada and Utah, where a third party candidate is also on the ballot, are all too close to call, each dangling six electoral votes for one of the candidates to snatch.

Trump has the popular vote leading Clinton (47 percent) with 48.9 percent. The business mogulalso has 139 electoral votes of the 270 needed to win. Former Sec. of State Clinton lags behind with 104 electoral votes.

As Trump takes the lead, Asian markets have plunged, AP reported. The DOW dropped 500 points, according to CNN. The Mexican peso fell 8 percent, its deepest drop since the devaluation crisis in 1994, Financial Times reported.

The dollar fell 2.9 percent against the yen, S&P 500 futures fell 3 percent and gold was up 2.8 percent.

"The peso has become the prime gauge of Mr Trump’s fortunes given his rhetoric on immigration, trade and the US southern border, where he has promised to build a wall," the Financial Times wrote.

Dow futures are now down over 750 points. For context: Day after 9/11, they went down 690 points. #Elections2016— Peter Shankman (@petershankman) November 9, 2016

9:49 p.m.: Boston is up to 20 percent returns on the weed proposition, but it looks like this is going to take all night, according to Metro reporter Kristin Toussaint.

CNN projected that Clinton will take Illinois, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland, Rhode Island, Delaware and the District of Columbia. The network expects Trump to take Oklahoma, Tennessee and Mississippi.

The race in Floridia is extremely tight, but Clinton maintains the lead.

7:55 p.m.: Multiple media outlets have called North Carolina for Clinton.

Clinton leads in the state and now has a larger lead in Florida, according to CNN.

7:51 p.m.: A large crowd gathers at the Javits Center as the largest group of polling closings is just eight minutes away.

Options include the usual "I Voted," "Yo Voté," and others like "I copied my vote from Michelle Obama" and "I voted with my vagina, but I put the sticker here."

7:31 p.m.: Multiple media organizations have called West Virginia for Trump as he gains his lead in Florida.

7:28 p.m.U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey revealed he is a Trumpeter

Toomey, who is in the midst of a tight race with Democrat Katie McGinty, voted for Donald Trump, Billy Penn reported.

“In the end I decided we’ve just gotta change the course we’re on, so I voted for Donald Trump,” he said.

7:25 p.m. Clinton, who was trailing Trump in Florida, has pulled ahead.

Just minutes ago, Trump led the vote in Florida with 38,726 votes over Clinton's numbers. With 30 percent of the vote in, Clinton has pulled ahead and now leads with 50,340 votes more than Trump, according to media reports.

9 p.m. - Arizona, Colorado, western Kansas, Louisiana, the western Upper Peninsula of Michigan, Minnesota, eastern Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, western South Dakota, the western panhandle of Texas, Wisconsin and Wyoming

4:10 p.m.: Polls in Philadelphia and Pennsylvania were seeing heavy turnout all day, according to Metro reporter Sam Newhouse

Former Democratic Gov. Ed Rendell was touring polls to encourage voters to stick out the long lines, cautioning them that Republican turnout is also high.

“Around the state they are having just as heavy turnout as we are, so we can’t leave,” Rendell told some of the more than 200 Temple students waiting in a roughly three-hour line to vote near 12th and Susquehanna streets. “I fear this is going to be a one point, two point night, so everybody has to hang in there. … I hope Hillary [wins].”

Meanwhile, conservative activist and undercover filmmaker James O’Keefe’s video of himself talking a Philly church bus bringing voters to the polls caused a stir on Twitter. O’Keefe labeled it “voter fraud” and got retweeted more than 5,000 times.

But DA Seth Williams, at an afternoon press conference discussing his office’s responses to voter complaints around the city, said the video depicted no illegal activity, and that there is nothing illegal about taking people to vote.

Williams makes reference to Project Veritas claim without calling it by name. "There is nothing illegal abt taking people to vote," he says.— Holly Otterbein (@hollyotterbein) November 8, 2016

3:32 p.m.: Not many voters said Obama's legacy factored into their vote, according to an exit poll.

An exit poll shows that 17 percent of voters were contacted by the Clinton campaign versus 8 percent of voters that said they were contacted by the Trump campaign, Politico reported.

Twenty-one percent of voters said they cast their ballot in support of President Obama, 19 percent said they voted against Obama, but the majority of voters said Obama’s legacy did not factor into their vote.

3:20 p.m.: Because Ken Bone.

Undecided voter and gone-viral red sweater wearer Ken Bone voted, but he won’t say which candidate he decided on, the New York Post reported.

3:16 p.m.: Hinting that he won’t accept election results if he loses, Trump speaks on radio WFL-AM on Tuesday.

The Texas Tribune reported in May that both former presidents Bush planned to stay out of politics. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush was mocked by Trump for being "low energy" before dropping out of the primary race,

"I submit to you that if you're in the club, and by the club I mean the establishment, if you are among the few elites in Washington and New York that actually, for lack of a better term, run the country, you're going to hang together with other club members," Limbaugh said, explaining why the Bushes voted Democrat, according to The Hill.

3:07 p.m.: The Koch brothers won’t say for whom they voted."That's a private decision," said James Davis, a Koch spokesman, CNN reported.

2:53 p.m.: Remember when voter turnout was low? The U.S. typically trails other developed countries in voter turnout, according to a Pew Research study. But look at these lines across the nation today!

2:47 p.m.: If you’re hungry for democracy,Pizza for the Pollsis your parmesan hero. You can report a long line at a polling place and get piping hot pizza delivered to keep up your strength. Already voted? Donate to the pizza fund so they don’t run out of “dough.”

Per The Hill, Assange, who's currently living in the Embassy of Ecuador in London, posted a front-page statement to his site lashing out at claims that damaging leaks against the Clinton campaign were an indication of Assange's support for either candidate.

Luzerne County reporter Matt Petrillo confirmed with Metro that a machine in Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, had to be recalibrated three times after voters tried pressing Trump and the machine jumped to Clinton.

10:45 a.m.: Chris Christie votes for Donald Trump early in New Jersey, according to NJ.com.

For the first time in seven years, the New Jersey governor didn't notify the press before he went to the polls. At 6:06 a.m., just moments after they opened in his state, Christie arrived at Mendham Township's Brookside Engine Company to cast his vote for Trump.

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped fewer than 100 points upon opening, the Boston Globe reported.

Investors are bracing for Election Day results. A Clinton victory could result in a rally for stocks; by contrast, a Trump victory could result in a Brexit-like decline from 9 to 12 percent, per USA Today.

Claiming minority inspectors and poll watchers are being denied entry and access, and reporting instances of electioneering, the local GOP took to Twitter early Tuesday to keep tabs on the predominantly Democratic city.

Biden and his wife Jill arrived early at Alexis I. du Pont High School in Wilmington, CNN reported. Joking with reporters on his impending departure from the White House, Biden said, "The bad news is I'm not going away," adding that he will continue to fight against income inequality.